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Sao Paulo metro strike stirs chaos as World Cup looms

Update : 09 Jun 2014, 08:10 PM

Brazilian police used tear gas on Monday to disperse metro workers on strike in São Paulo in defiance of a court order to return to work, causing major traffic congestion just three days before the city hosts the opening match of the World Cup soccer tournament.

The partial subway strike, now in its fifth day, has snarled traffic in South America’s biggest city and added to widespread concerns about whether Brazilian authorities will be able to prevent street protests and other simmering labor disputes from disrupting the Cup.

Shortly after the early morning fracas at the Ana Rosa subway station, the state metro company said it had fired 60 striking workers, a move some feared could increase tensions further. A local court had ruled on Sunday that the strike was illegal.

The subway workers, who are seeking a pay rise of about twice the annual inflation rate, will vote whether to extend the strike at 1:00 p.m. local time (1600 GMT) after a downtown rally that will be joined by São Paulo’s homeless workers movement and other protest groups.

“The World Cup is not an excuse for us” to strike, Paulo Pasin, president of Fenametro, the country’s union of subway workers, told Reuters at Ana Rosa. “We want to reopen talks.”

The striking workers are pushing for a 12 percent pay rise, though the state subway company offered 8.7 percent. 

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